“…(Leung et al, 2011; Walsh and Quigley, 2008) The addition of AO to compensate for optical aberrations enables imaging of RNFL structure in exquisite detail, with or without fluorescent contrast agents by SLO, or by OCT, including in the shorter eyes of small rodents. (Geng et al, 2012; Geng et al, 2009; Gray et al, 2008; Jian et al, 2013);[Jian et al, Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2014;55: E-Abstract 2083; Zhang et al, Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2014;55: E-Abstract 2085] AO-SLO and AO-OCT have recently been used to image RNFL bundles in human eyes, revealing fine detail in both healthy and damaged areas. (Chen et al, 2015; Huang et al, 2014; Kocaoglu et al, 2011; Kocaoglu et al, 2014b; Takayama et al, 2012; Takayama et al, 2013b) One interesting finding common to several of these recent AO studies is that reflectivity of RNFL bundles is often discrete, certainly more so than can be appreciated without AO (e.g., see Figure 2).…”